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Kathleen Sebelius resigning after troubled rollout of U.S. health-care law

The resignation of U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius comes as the White House seeks to rebound from the politically damaging launch of Barack Obama's health-care law. (Joe Raedle / GETTY IMAGES)

A White House source said Sebelius is likely to be replaced by Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the director of the Office of Management and Budget. (Alex Wong / GETTY IMAGES)

By Julie PaceThe Associated Press

Thu., April 10, 2014

WASHINGTON—U.S. President Barack Obama’s health and human services secretary is resigning after the rocky rollout of his signature health-care law, a White House official said Thursday.

Kathleen Sebelius’s resignation comes just over a week after the end of the first enrolment period for the “Obamacare” law. While the opening weeks of the rollout were marred by website woes, the administration rebounded strongly by enrolling more than seven million people in the new insurance marketplaces.

The resignation of Sebelius following her five-year tenure in Obama’s cabinet comes as the White House seeks to rebound from the politically damaging launch of the health-care law. But it could also set the stage for a contentious election-year confirmation hearing to replace her, as Republicans seek to make the health law the centerpiece of their efforts to retake the Senate in the November midterm contests.

In a sign that the White House is seeking to avoid a nomination fight, the official said the president was tapping Sylvia Mathews Burwell, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, to replace Sebelius. Burwell was unanimously confirmed by the Senate for her current post.

The official was not authorized to discuss Sebelius’s resignation ahead of the formal announcement and requested anonymity.

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Sebelius, a former governor of Kansas, has been one of Obama’s longest-serving cabinet officials. She was instrumental in shepherding the health-care law through Congress in 2010 and implementing its initial components, including a popular provision that allow young people to stay on their parents’ insurance plans until age 26.

But Sebelius’s relationship with the White House frayed during last fall’s rollout of the insurance exchanges that are at the centre of the sweeping overhaul. The president and his top advisers said they were frustrated by what they considered to be a lack of information from the Health Department over the extent of the website troubles.

In the months before the exchanges opened, Sebelius assured lawmakers and the public that new health insurance markets would open on time in all 50 states. After technical problems crippled online sign-ups after the Oct. 1 launch, the White House sent management expert and longtime Obama adviser Jeffrey Zients to oversee a rescue operation that turned things around by the end of November.

Sebelius dropped no hints about her resignation Thursday when she testified at a budget hearing.

The next secretary will have to with contend with huge challenges related to the continued implementation of the health overhaul, as well as the divisive politics around it that show no sign of abating.

On the practical side, the administration has to improve customer service for millions of Americans trying to navigate the new system. There’s also a concern that premiums may rise for 2015, since many younger, healthier people appear to have waited out open enrolment season.

On the political front, congressional Republicans remain implacably opposed to “Obamacare,” even as several Republican governors have accepted the law’s expansion of safety-net coverage for the poor under Medicaid. Opposition by congressional Republicans means they can be expected to continue to deny additional funds for implementation.

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